| Alfonso I D'este |
Article Index for Alfonso I |
Website Links For Alfonso |
Information AboutAlfonso I D'este |
|
Alfonso d'Este ( 21 July , 1486 – 31 October , 1534 ) was Duke of Ferrara during the War Of The League Of Cambrai . He was the son of Ercole D'Este I . In the Italian Wars he entered the League Of Cambrai against Venice and remained an ally of Louis XII Of France even after Pope Julius II had made peace with Venice; in 1510 Julius Excommunicated and declared his fiefs forfeit, adding Ferrara to the Papal States ; Alfonso then fought successfully against the Venetian and Papal armies, capturing Bologna , and played a major part in the French victory at the Battle Of Ravenna (1512) . In 1526 – 1527 Alfonso participated in the expedition of Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor and king of Spain, against Pope Clement VII , and in 1530 the pope again recognized him as possessor of the forfeited duchies of Modena and Reggio . Alfonso was one of the husbands of painted ''The Feast of the Gods'' in 1514 , Bellini's last completed painting. He turned to Bellini's pupil, Titian , for a sequence of paintings. In 1529 Alphonso created the most magnificent gallery of his time, in order to display his works of art against Alabaster -veneered walls under a gilded ceiling ( {Link without Title} ). He inherited from Cardinal d'Este the poet Ariosto . Following in the lead of his father Ercole, who had made Ferrara into one of the musical centers of Europe, Alfonso brought some of the most famous musicians of the time to his court to work as composers, instrumentalists and singers. Musicians from northern Europe who worked at Ferrara during his reign included Antoine Brumel and Adrian Willaert , the latter of whom was to become the founder of the Venetian School , something which could not have happened without Alfonso's patronage. When Alfonso’s grandson Alfonso II D'Este , Robert Browning 's duke of " My Last Duchess " {Link without Title} , produced no male heir; the d'Este line died out; by law, the d'Este title and property reverted to the Pope; and the priceless art was dispersed. SEE ALSO EXTERNAL LINKS REFERENCES
|
|
|